A Rainha Diaba (1974) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
6 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Definitely worth a look for its eye-popping colors, sets and costumes, and for Fontoura's assured direction
debblyst15 December 2005
"A Rainha Diaba" is Antonio Carlos da Fontoura's second film, 6 years (!!) after his critical and box-office hit "Copacabana Me Engana' (q.v.). Making a total change in theme and visual style, "Rainha..." is about an underworld drug dealer in Rio de Janeiro, called "queen" Diaba (meaning "she-devil" and played by Milton Gonçalves), who happens to be black, gay, powerful, vindictive and extremely violent. As one of Diaba's dealers and special protégé is threatened to be caught by the police, Diaba concocts with sleazy Catitu (Nelson Xavier) a plan to make small-time pimp Bereco (Stepan Nercessian) fall down in his place. But things don't turn out as expected, as treason lurks everywhere around Diaba.

This was one of the first Brazilian films to deal -- in expressionist, non-realistic style -- with then new reality of large-scale organized drug dealing in Rio's favelas, on its way to become the incredibly violent and bloody business it is today. In his candid, must-see interview for the DVD release, Fontoura explains the idea behind "Diaba": every time he smoked a joint he wondered the amount of bloodshed that came with it.

The most remarkable aspect of "Rainha" is its visual treatment: the colors scream, like a Frida Kahlo on acid. José Medeiros' lighting and agile camera-work are stunning, but it's Ângelo de Aquino's hallucinating, jaw-dropping sets and costumes that leave an indelible impression, making early Almodóvar seems conservative by comparison. Fontoura's sure-hand style manages to mix expressionism, hyper-realim and gory violence (be prepared to see gallons of blood throughout) with a stylized depiction of Rio's underworld, thanks to good locations and fine casting choices.

The four stars of the movie are in great shape: Milton Gonçalves' Diaba is rather two-dimensional (he had no time to prepare for his role) but his hopelessly masculine physique helps: it's because he's a dog of a drag queen that his violence and anger seem legitimate. Odete Lara (Fontoura's ex-wife) is still an impressively sexy woman at 45, brave in her fight/sex scene with Bereco and giving it all in her scary torture scene, and she's obviously delighted (so are we) to have the two singing numbers that function as breath-recovering pauses for the audience. Nelson Xavier does his sleazy act wittily, maybe a tad mannered but always avoiding clichés. Most of all, it's Stepan Nercessian who steals our attention, building a living flesh-and-blood character out of Bereco, from small-time pimp to wide-eyed novice crook to trapped mouse in a big game, always managing to making us care for him, even if he's a rotten scumbag.

Though less brilliant than Fontoura's first film -- the ending is particularly unsatisfying -- "Diaba" is still thrilling, definitely worth your time for its eye-popping colors, costumes and sets, especially in the sparkling new DVD release. My vote: 7 out of 10.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Drugs underworld
Emerenciano7 December 2004
If you're Brazilian you know how films made in the 70's were. They used to be about things like sex, violence and drugs. This was probably the worst time of cinema in Brazil. But many movies could be saved from the trash of the seventh art. "Rainha Diaba" is one of these films.

The main character is Diaba, a homossexual who who dresses like a lady. He controls the bandits and drug dealers of an area of Rio de Janeiro thorough violence and threats. He is feared and even loved by the people who work for him. However some of his men decide they could take the power from Diaba's hands and they try to make a plot to do it. It's an old film, but we can see some actors who are famous in Brazil today, like Milton Gonçalves, Nelson Xavier and Stephan Nercessian.

my rate 6 /10
1 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Queer gangster war in Rio de Janeiro
guisreis20 February 2022
It is nice to see a gangster film with a war between past partners full of betrayals in a decaying Rio de Janeiro. Actors perform well, particularly Milton Gonçalves and Nelson Xavier. The prostitute played by Odete Lara explored (both psychologically and economically) by the pimp played by Stepan Nercessian is very depressing, just as reality is in those situations. However, dialogues and art direction are too much kitsch, unconvincing, cheap... they did bother me. By the way, a queer gangster as the boss is interesting, but it is extremely loosely inpired by famous Madalena Satã, being not really comparable to Madalena Satã movie from 2002. Anyway, it is nonsense, as I have seen, to consider that this 1974 movie by Antônio Carlos de Fontoura is a better film or a better representation of Madalena Satã than the film directed by Karim Aïnouz and played by Lázaro Ramos in the leading role. In addition, I may mention that in Rainha Diaba there is a torture scene that I just do not know what to think about. Torturers had a lot of fun doing that, and the movie was made during brutal military dictatorship, that tortured with the very same methods. Indeed, I do not know if I consider it an unbearable lack of empathy to portray torture that way, or if I take it as a fierce critic as torturers were just the opposite of how regime repressive agents wanted to be seen. To resume, I summarize the film in one sentence: what if Almodovar and Tarantino made together a Pornochanchada?
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Bloody and Kitsch War of Marijuana in the Underworld of Rio de Janeiro
claudio_carvalho28 December 2005
In Lapa, Rio de Janeiro, the homosexual drug dealer lord Rainha Diaba (Milton Gonçalves) decides to find a scapegoat to save his lover from the jail for traffic with students. His gang, under the command of Catitu (Nelson Xavier), uses the young pimp Bereco (Stepan Nercessian), but he escapes from the police siege and decides to break and rob the points where Rainha Diaba sells his marijuana, initiating a bloody war against the powerful dealer.

"A Rainha Diaba" is a very violent Brazilian movie of the 70's, in the underworld of Rio de Janeiro, and awarded in many Festivals. The kitsch atmosphere, associated with a brilliant work in the lighting, is ahead of time, and Pedro Almodóvar used this style mostly in his first movies. The gore story, about a cruel homosexual marijuana dealer, is full of betrayals, shootings, travesties and prostitution, and was awarded as follows: (1) Prêmio de Qualidade INC ("Quality Award INC") / 1974 (Coruja de Ouro – "Golden Owl"); (2) Instituto Nacional de Cinema ("National Institute of Cinema") / 1974 (Best Actor: Milton Gonçalves); (3) VIII Prêmio Air France de Cinema ("VIII Air France Award of Cinema") / 1974 (Best Actor: Milton Gonçalves); (4) Prêmio APCA – Associação Paulista de Críticos de Arte ("APCA Award – Paulista Association of Art Critics") / (Best Actress: Odete Lara / Whole Work); (5) VIII Festival de Brasília do Cinema Brasileiro ("VIII Brasília Festival of Brazilian Cinema") / 1975 (Best Actor: Milton Gonçalves / Best Cinematography: José Medeiros / Best Music Score: Guilherme Vaz). This movie participated also in the following festivals: (1) Cannes Festival / Quinzaine des Réalisateurs (France, 1974); (2) San Sebastian Cinema Festival (Spain, 1975); (3) 80 Ans de Cinema Brésilien – Centre Pompidou (France, 1978); (4) Black Roots, Racines Noires (Milan, Italy & Paris, France – 1999).

The DVD is one of the best I have, with excellent extra material, including interviews, making of, trailer, posters and additional footages. Just as a curiosity, Milton Gonçalves was very promoted in his career by this movie, but he was the third choice of director Antonio Carlos da Fontoura. His other two first options refused the role of Rainha Diaba, afraid with the repercussion of such a corrupted and evil character. There are excellent information and curiosities in the Extras of this DVD. My vote is nine.

Title (Brazil): "A Rainha Diaba" ("The Devil Queen")
8 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
an antiquated mish-mash of queer grandstanding and gangster subterfuge
lasttimeisaw22 December 2017
A curio from Brazil, ostensibly THE DEVIL QUEEN is a rinky-dink internecine power usurpation within a drug kingpin's clique, set in the seedy Lapa neighborhood of Rio de Janiero, but it is its plucky and colorful depiction of the less-shown counterculture which sustains its cult renown.

More tallying with camp aesthetics than a homoerotic tantalizer, the film's title is a sobriquet of the drug lord (Gonçalves), who is black and queer, sentimental and merciless. In order to protect one of his pretty-face underlings, who sells drugs to students, he requests Catitu (Xavier) to look for a whipping boy to take the blame, and Catitu lays his eyes on Bereco (Nercessian), a small-time pimp of Isa Gonzalez (Lara, paired with Nercessian who is only half of her age, gives the best impression of a good-hearted working girl).

Bereco is hot-blooded, credulous and reckless, he is oblivious of Catitu's ulterior motive and wallows in the fast money from their dangerous escapade, when finally the police force knocks on his front door, Bereco barely escapes and goes into hiding, leaving Isa wounded and heartbroken. But Catitu has his own plan to eradicate the Devil Queen once and for all and subsequently convinces all other underlings, but no one has the guts to be the executioner, so Catitu needs Bereco to do one last job for him, rubbing out the Queen. His plan almost works as he plans, but one can never know who is harboring a bigger ambition to gobble up the entire cake for one's own pleasure, the ending is as ludicrous as the wantonly spewed fake blood.

However, there is a jovial kindred spirit in the scenes where the Queen organizing a drag party in his residence, a miscellany of kaleidoscopic characters slinking amid each other and blatantly vaunts their unification to help the beleaguered Queen, whereas in a less salubrious front, it is a cheap move poking fun at the sadist torture inflicted on a shrieking Ida. For all the film's tongue-in-cheek temerity, Milton Gonçalves emotes with a staggering impression jumping from an authoritarian maniac to a chirpy, cutesy maiden and Nelson Xavier is really in his elements when it comes to duplicity and wheedling.

In a nutshell, laced with a psychedelic soundscape and a garish palette, Antonio Carlos da Fontoura's THE DEVIL QUEEN is an antiquated mish-mash of queer grandstanding and gangster subterfuge, with high voltage of panache and mischief in its trashy artery.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
More accurate in its setting than entertaining to watch
PenOutOfTime8 September 2011
As mentioned by other reviewers, "A Rainha Diaba" is striking in its visual design, costumes, and sense of place. These elements are one of the film's clear strengths.

Another great strength is in the film's understanding and depiction of the underworld. A vast percentage of the world's film and television is based on crime drama, but very little is realistic in portraying the social dynamics of crime. "A Rainha Diaba" is a great exception to this, and is realistic and believable in building society.

There are two big problems with the film as well however.

In the first place, the plot of the film is basically not compelling, and fails to engage the viewer. The ending in this regard is particularly unsatisfactory, being both emotionally unsatisfying, and unrealistic.

In the second place, much of the acting is unconvincing and fails to engage the viewer. Some people may be able to overlook these flaws, but those looking for a great story or absorbing entertainment should look elsewhere.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed